Jody Firth
Jody Firth is a British racing driver, who most recently competed in the 2009 season of the British GT Championship.
Having raced in a number of lower formulae, Firth has competed in the British GT Championship, the European [Le Mans Series], the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the FIA World Endurance Championship, the SPEED EuroSeries and the American Le Mans Series. He won the GT4 category of the British GT Championship in 2009, and later won the SPEED UK Series in 2010 and the SPEED EuroSeries in 2011.
Career
Early career
Firth, born in Wakefield, England, started his career in karting, finishing sixth in the Lincolnshire [Kart Racing Club Rotax Max Senior] in 2003, and nineteenth in the Lincolnshire Kart [Racing Club Winter Series Rotax Max Senior] in 2004. He made his car racing debut in 2004, entering the Formula Renault 2.0 UK Winter Series, driving for Embassy Racing, and he finished fourteenth overall. He then competed in twelve rounds of the Formula Renault 2.0 UK in 2005 for Team JLR, without great success; finishing 26th overall. He became team manager of Embassy Racing in mid-2005, and stepped back from driving.2009
Firth returned to the cockpit in April 2009, partnering Nigel Moore in the British GT Championship, driving for Team WFR in a GT4-class Ginetta G50. However, his first professional race since 2005 actually came in the Ginetta G50 Cup season opener at the Brands Hatch Indy Circuit, driving for Hepworth International, with his best finish of the weekend being a fifth place in the second race. His first race in the British GT was the 2009 season's opening event, held at Oulton Park, where he and Moore finished eighth in race one, and ninth in race two, taking the GT4 class victory in both races. He and Moore were then entered in the Silverstone round of the GT4 European Cup, taking a victory in race one, before retiring in race two. Moore and Firth entered all eight rounds of the British GT Championship in 2009, with their best overall finish being seventh. The pair were GT4 class champions for that year, taking eleven class victories in total. During the season, Firth also entered two rounds of the MR2 Racing Series, driving a first-generation Toyota MR-2 prepared by Matthew Coggins.He qualified on pole, and won one of the two races he entered, taking the fastest lap. He also drove for Team WFR alongside Warren Hughes and Darren Manning in the 1000 km of Silverstone, part of the Le Mans Series, entering an Embassy WF01-Zytek in the LMP2 category, and finished fourth in class.2010–2011
For 2010, he and Hughes entered the SPEED UK Series, driving for Team WFR in a Ligier JS49. The partnership proved to be a successful one, with Hughes and Firth taking the title in the final round of the season. Firth also entered three rounds of the Formula Le Mans, driving for DAMS alongside Hughes, and they won the 1000 km of Algarve and 1000 km of Silverstone. The two victories saw the pair finish twelfth in the championship, with 30 points.In 2011, Firth and Hughes stepped up from the SPEED UK Series into the SPEED EuroSeries, once more driving for Team WFR, but this time in the team's new WFR03 car. The pair won three of the nine races that season, and took a total of seven podiums on the way to the title. Firth also entered all five rounds of the Le Mans Series in 2011, driving for TDS Racing and partnering Mathias Beche and Pierre Thiriet in a LMP2 class Oreca 03. The team took two class wins, at the 1000 km of Spa and 6 Hours of Estoril, and finished fourth overall in the LMP2 championship. Firth also partnered Stefan Hodgetts in a Century Motorsport-entered Ginetta G55 at the Rockingham round of the British GT Championship, finishing fourth in race one, but retiring in race two.